Israel, Islamic Jihad Agree to Egyptian-Brokered Gaza Truce

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Israel and militants in Gaza agreed to cease hostilities Tuesday after Egypt brokered a "mutual truce" following four days of bloodletting which left 25 Gazans dead.

Under the agreement, which came into force at 1:00am (2300 GMT on Monday), both Israel and militants from Islamic Jihad, who have been responsible for the lion's share of the rockets lobbed at southern Israel, agreed to hold their fire, an Egyptian intelligence official told Agence France Presse.

Israeli officials and Islamic Jihad both confirmed that a deal was in place, although they were quick to warn that the agreement would be short lived if the other side stepped out of line.

"There is an understanding, and we are following what's going on in the field," Home Front Defense Minister Matan Vilnai told Israeli public radio.

"Apparently things are calming down and this round of confrontations appears to be behind us."

And in Gaza, an Islamic Jihad spokesman said the radical group was willing to respect the deal if Israel would end its targeted killings of militants.

"We accept a ceasefire if Israel agrees to apply it by ending its aggressions and assassinations," Daud Shihab told AFP.

News of the agreement emerged early on Tuesday after Egypt brokered what the Egyptian intelligence official said was a "comprehensive and mutual" truce.

"An agreement on ending the current operations between the two sides, including a halt to assassinations, entered into force at 1:00 am," he told AFP, saying the deal was reached after the Egyptians held "intensive contacts" with both sides.

But the Israel minister denied there was any agreement to halt the military's campaign of assassinations.

"Anyone who is involved in terrorism against Israel needs to know that they are in our sights," he warned.

There was no immediate comment from Gaza's Hamas rulers, who have been seeking Cairo's help to restore calm, and whose armed wing has not been firing rockets at Israel.

Since the agreement came into force, the number of rockets being fired at Israel dropped dramatically, with police reporting only two hitting the southern areas which did cause any injuries or damage.

And the skies over Gaza were calm.

The announcement came after four days of violence that began on Friday with Israel's assassination of the head of the Popular Resistance Committees, a militant group.

The strike prompted militants to fire hundreds of rockets and mortar rounds into southern Israel, wounding five people and prompting authorities to shut down schools within firing range of Gaza.

The Israeli military carried out dozens of air strikes during the flare-up, saying it was targeting militants and weapons facilities.

Palestinian medics put the total death toll late on Monday at 25, with more than 80 injured.

Of those killed, 19 were militants -- 14 from Islamic Jihad, and five from the Popular Resistance Committees -- and six were civilians, among them two minors.

Comments 3
Default-user-icon Dany B (Guest) 13 March 2012, 11:18

Till next time.
Question is what did the Islamic Jihad gain this time?
They paid with their head who planned and executed to murder of 8 civilian on the way to Eilat-In south of Israel few month ago. now he joined his other brothers the Shahids in hell.
26 people been killed in Gaza, most of them involved in shooting rockets and mortars against Israeli civilian.
Now they are begging for quiet.
So typical.
Am sure hundreds of thousands people in Gaza missing the time they used to work in Israel deal with it and bring income to their families.
This time is passed since few of them preferred to put bombs in buses and public place.
Blame only those fanatics who cut your families income.

Default-user-icon Danny B (Guest) 13 March 2012, 12:50

Mowaten:
Talking of assassinations you don't need Israel's help for it, as you Arabs do it with greater success. Look how "nicely" you kill each other in Iraq Libya Syria, Iraq and even in Lebanon you slaughtered one the other by the thousands.
Its very nice to call us name and to blame us for all of your troubles.
If you were accepting the UN Partition decision in 1947 and not rushing to attack the Jews in Palestine, The Palestinian could live in peace.
You lost, eat what you have cooked.
And about calling us invaders to Palestine:
We were living in Palestine much before those vagabonds called Palestinian came there and we'll remain much after them.

Default-user-icon bennie (Guest) 13 March 2012, 13:14

To be clear. The Palestinian factions are so heavily infiltrated that they can't make a plan or movement without Israel knowing about it. If Israel has information about imminent operations, of course it will strike.